Letitia James

Trump calls sons 'idiots' and will likely throw them under bus in New York case: biographer

Donald Trump biographer David Cay Johnston recalled on MSNBC a moment when the self-described billionaire called his sons "idiots" and anticipated that the former president will willingly throw them under the bus in the New York state financial case against the family.

Speaking on Thursday, host Nicolle Wallace cited the recently released transcript of the deposition that Trump gave to Attorney General Letitia James. She cited the bizarre moment in which Trump claimed that nuclear war might be on the horizon because he wasn't reelected in 2020.

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Trump's rambling trial deposition left lawyers fearing they'd 'be here until midnight': report

Newly released transcripts from Donald Trump’s deposition earlier this year in a New York State civil fraud case show prosecutors were irked with the former president’s long-winded ramblings, Insider reports.

New York Attorney General Letitia James’ $250 million lawsuit alleges that Trump, along with his two oldest sons and two of his former top executives, exaggerated the former president’s net worth in financial fillings for the Trump Organization, among other business ventures. The case is scheduled to go to trial Oct. 2.

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Trump swears he was too 'busy' saving the world from 'nuclear holocaust' to commit crimes

Donald Trump told investigators in New York that he was too busy saving the world from "nuclear holocaust" to commit crimes.

The former president said in a sworn deposition stretching over seven hours in April that his efforts "saving millions of lives" kept him from running his company, which stands accused of fraud in a civil lawsuit filed by New York attorney general Letitia James, reported Insider.

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Revealed: Read Donald Trump's full transcript in Letitia James fraud suit

Donald Trump grossly inflated his assets, says Attorney General Letitia James, and now the full transcript in that civil fraud case is being revealed to the public.

In nearly 500 pages, and on tape, Trump is probed about his properties and business and whether or not he has lied about all of it on official documents.

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Trump overstated net worth by $2.2 billion in one year: NY attorney general

New York Attorney General Letitia James has accused former President Donald Trump of routinely overstating his net worth.

ABC News first reported on James' motion for a summary judgment in a $250 million lawsuit against Trump and his family.

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Banks barred from concealing Trump docs in $250M New York state lawsuit: report

A New York State Supreme Court judge on Tuesday ruled that banks and insurance companies can’t conceal documents in connection with a lawsuit that alleges the Trump Organization inflated assets, The Daily Beast reports.

Judge Arthur F. Engoron’s ruling follows efforts by several firms to hide documents that show how they “unwittingly” became part of the alleged scheme, the report said.

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Trump has not committed serious crimes, majority of likely Iowa GOP caucusgoers believe: NBC poll

Even after four criminal indictments, two pending civil trials, and a civil trial that found him liable for sexual abuse, the majority of likely Republican caucusgoers in Iowa, the first nominating contest of the GOP's 2024 presidential race, say they do not believe Donald Trump has committed series crimes.

Trump has been indicted by a Miami federal grand jury on Espionage Act charges claiming he mishandled classified documents. He has been indicted by a Washington, D.C. federal grand jury on charges related to his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election he lost. He has been indicted by a Georgia grand jury on charges – including racketeering – related to his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election he lost. He has been indicted by a New York grand jury on charges of falsification of business records related to his alleged hush money payoff of a porn star, which prosecutors say was done to protect his 2016 election bid.

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NY attorney general's office won’t defend Gov. Hochul in migrant case in ‘extremely rare’ split

NEW YORK — New York Attorney General Letitia James’ office dropped its role Thursday defending the Hochul administration in litigation over the state’s responsibility to shelter migrants, a highly unusual step that appeared to suggest policy differences between two of the state’s most powerful Democrats. The Manhattan law firm Selendy Gay Elsberg has replaced James’ legal team in the case, according to a filing in Manhattan Supreme Court. The move came in a case centered on the city’s right-to-shelter mandate established in 1981, which mandates the city provide shelter to anyone who requests i...

Trump lawyer Habba buried by MSNBC legal analyst for spreading baseless 'legal PR'

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin blew off comments Donald Trump lawyer Alina Habba made on Fox News Sunday morning in which she tried to dismiss obstruction of justice charges related to the attempted destruction of Mar-a-Lago surveillance video that led to a superseding indictment from special counsel Jack Smith.

Speaking with host Erin O'Hearn, Rubin made a point of noting that Habba is no longer being used as a courtroom attorney for the embattled former president which allows her to make outrageous statements that lawyers who are preparing to defend to appear in court wouldn't dare to make in public.

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Trump's social media attacks on Jack Smith could 'violate' D.C. court rules: former FBI lawyer

Former President Donald Trump continued his assault on special counsel Jack Smith and other prosecutors that work for the Department of Justice Monday – and his Truth Social attacks have reached such a degree that former Robert Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann thinks that the Washington, D.C. courts will act if Trump is indicted.

"Let's remember that he is out on bail in not one, but two criminal cases," Weissmann said about Trump. "One in Manhattan. One before Aileen Cannon, as you noted. And it's also important to note that if he's indicted in D.C., D.C. has, as part of its standing order, free press, fair trial rules that limit what a defendant can say that could taint a jury."

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Rupert Murdoch pushes new Hail Mary plan to break GOP's 'unhealthy' relationship with Trump: report

Following up on a report from Rolling Stone about Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch souring on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' presidential prospects, the New York Times is reporting that Murdoch is pushing for another Republican governor to enter the race.

According to the Times' sources, Murdoch "has privately told people that he would still like to see Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia enter the race" despite the fact that such late entries do not have a history of success.

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